Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA
Division of Biomedical Statistics and Informatics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2020 Jun;45(6):405-411. doi: 10.1136/rapm-2019-101250. Epub 2020 Apr 7.
Frailty increases risk for complications after total joint arthroplasty (TJA). Whether this association is influenced by anesthetic administered is unknown. We hypothesized that use of neuraxial (spinal or epidural) anesthesia is associated with better outcomes compared with general anesthesia, and that the effect of anesthesia type on outcomes differs by frailty status.
This single-institution cohort study included all patients (≥50 years) from January 2005 through December 2016 undergoing unilateral, primary and revision TJA. Using multivariable Cox regression, we assessed relationships between anesthesia type, a preoperative frailty deficit index (FI) categorized as non-frail (FI <0.11), vulnerable (FI 0.11 to 0.20), and frail (FI >0.20), and complications (mortality, infection, wound complications/hematoma, reoperation, dislocation, and periprosthetic fracture) within 1 year after surgery. Interactions between anesthesia type and frailty were tested, and stratified models were presented when an interaction (p<0.1) was observed.
Among 18 458 patients undergoing TJA, more patients were classified as frail (21.5%) and vulnerable (36.2%) than non-frail (42.3%). Anesthesia type was not associated with complications after adjusting for age, joint, and revision type. However, in analyzes stratified by frailty, vulnerable patients under neuraxial block had less mortality (HR=0.49; 95% CI 0.27 to 0.89) and wound complications/hematoma (HR=0.71; 95% CI 0.55 to 0.90), whereas no difference in risk by anesthesia type was observed among patients found non-frail or frail.
Neuraxial anesthesia use among vulnerable patients was associated with improved survival and less wound complications. Calculating preoperative frailty prior to TJA informs perioperative risk and enhances shared-decision making for selection of anesthesia type.
虚弱增加了全关节置换术后(TJA)并发症的风险。这种关联是否受麻醉方式的影响尚不清楚。我们假设与全身麻醉相比,使用椎管内(脊髓或硬膜外)麻醉与更好的结果相关,并且麻醉类型对结果的影响因虚弱状态而异。
这项单机构队列研究纳入了 2005 年 1 月至 2016 年 12 月期间接受单侧、初次和翻修 TJA 的所有(≥50 岁)患者。使用多变量 Cox 回归,我们评估了麻醉类型与术前虚弱缺陷指数(FI)之间的关系,FI 分为非虚弱(FI<0.11)、脆弱(FI 0.11 至 0.20)和虚弱(FI>0.20),以及术后 1 年内的并发症(死亡率、感染、伤口并发症/血肿、再次手术、脱位和假体周围骨折)。测试了麻醉类型和虚弱之间的相互作用,并在观察到相互作用(p<0.1)时呈现分层模型。
在 18458 例接受 TJA 的患者中,更多患者被归类为虚弱(21.5%)和脆弱(36.2%)而非非虚弱(42.3%)。在调整年龄、关节和翻修类型后,麻醉类型与并发症无关。然而,在按虚弱分层的分析中,接受神经阻滞的脆弱患者死亡率较低(HR=0.49;95%CI 0.27 至 0.89)和伤口并发症/血肿(HR=0.71;95%CI 0.55 至 0.90),而在非虚弱或虚弱患者中,麻醉类型之间的风险无差异。
在脆弱患者中使用椎管内麻醉与生存率提高和伤口并发症减少相关。在 TJA 之前计算术前虚弱程度可提供围手术期风险信息,并增强选择麻醉类型的共同决策。